With the objective of analyzing the structure of the mise en scène and the cinematic point of view of Quentin Tarantino, this dissertation assumes that Tarantino operates through an amalgam of entertainment and author cinema. With a break from the cinematographic illusionism and detachment, Tarantino seems to play with the elements within the scene, also with songs, music and sound effects, to work with an attention and distraction flow in a staging with depth of field. This dissertation aims to define the elements that constitute the cinema of Tarantino, as well as to designate the techniques utilized by the director, his references and style. It is understood that Tarantino represents a diversified postmodern cinema, with its foundations in the tradition of staging and in the entity of the take. Even when evoking elements of the melodrama or of the mainstream, Tarantino tries to subvert them by breaking down the illusionism and through the works of depth of field. The corpus of this research is composed by two of the most recent films of Tarantino thus far, Django Unchained (2012) and The Hateful Eight (2015). These objects of study were chosen because of their visual similarity, and their contrasting narrative constructions and rhythm, exacerbated through the use of soundtrack and the actor's performance as tensioning agents of the plot.